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Car dangling mysteriously from Toronto bridge prompts 'public mischief' probe

Charlemagne

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Jul 19, 2017
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Car dangling mysteriously from Toronto bridge prompts 'public mischief' probe

Police say an investigation has been opened and that charges could be laid

CBC News · Posted: May 02, 2018 8:32 AM ET | Last Updated:

Toronto police are scratching their heads over who left a burned-out, empty car dangling from a cable on the Leaside Bridge.

Commuters found themselves doing double takes on Wednesday morning as they drove by the burned-out blue sedan hanging from the bridge.

The vehicle prompted a major emergency services response, with police, firefighters, and paramedics all showing up at the scene, close to the Don Valley Parkway. They arrived to find the car with no engine, no passengers inside and the area cordoned off by yellow tape, not put there by police.

Const. Victor Kwong made the call to 911 during his morning commute.

"I was carpooling into work, and a passenger — actually it was my mother-in-law — was looking into the treed area of the Don River, and she noticed a car dangling there," said Kwong. "It's not a normal sight to see."

'It's the safety factor'

Kwong said he called 911 out of concern for public safety. The area underneath the car includes hiking trails popular with dog walkers, he noted.

"We can't just have people pulling pranks like this, tying objects underneath bridges. It's not just a nuisance factor, it's the safety factor," he said, noting thousands of cars pass under Toronto's bridges everyday.

Around 8 a.m. ET, police believed they'd solved the mystery, tweeting that that car was part of a movie shoot. They walked that theory back a few minutes later saying there was no shoot authorized or confirmed, leaving Torontonians wondering who would have taken the time to suspend the car, which had no licence plate.

"Obviously someone had intentionally put it up there, because it was tied to a winch system," said Capt. Adrian Ratushniak, of Toronto Fire Services, who described the car as a four-door sedan similar to a Honda Civic.

He said crews managed to get the car on the ground just before 10 a.m. — about three hours after the initial call came in. "I haven't seen anything like this in 30 years" with the fire department, Ratushniak said.

Even though the car was successfully grounded, officials are still stumped over who left it hanging from the bridge. A renegade artist? An off-the-grid film shoot? Students up to no good?

"Whatever it is, it did not have proper approval," said Kwong, noting police have now opened up a public mischief investigation and that charges are possible.

One theory is that the car was part of a prank like ones in years past by university students.

"These are things that come to mind," said Kwong, adding that it seemed it would have taken an engineer to know the strength of the cable and how it would fare with the weight of the car pulling on it.

As the investigation continues, Const. Caroline de Kloet has described what happens next as a "waiting game."

Toronto Mayor John Tory also weighed in on the mystery, when he was asked about it at an unrelated news conference Wednesday morning.

"I just saw some of the pictures myself that came from television this morning, and I was mystified as to how the car ended up there ... I was just shaking my head in disbelief," said Tory.

"It's just a lucky thing that it [was] dangling there, over something where there isn't a developed neighbourhood or a school or a public park."

With files from The Canadian Press

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/dangling-car-movie-shoot-1.4644468?cmp=FB_Post_News
 

essguy_

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Nov 1, 2001
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There's an overhead walkway underneath the bridge and this is likely how the car was winched up into the air. (it would be easy to tow then push a car beneath the bridge - as you can drive down off one of the side streets in the O'Connor/Donlands/Don Mills area then go along the bike path). It was a dangerous stunt though - where it was hanging isn't that widely used (off the paved path) but people DO go along that beaten track underneath the bridge.

I bike underneath this bridge fairly regularly on early morning bike rides. I've seen some unfortunate things - a couple suicides - there are makeshift memorials under the bridge. A few of us were fooled by a couple girls screaming "Help" from the walkway. A group of us stopped, looked for the person crying help in the brush (it sounded like she was being attacked), then finally realized that it was a couple kids hiding on the overhead walkway under the bridge, laughing. The joke was on them though, as police caught them because somebody called 911 as we were looking.
 

james t kirk

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Aug 17, 2001
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A bit late for a Kipling prank.

Hopefully no damage to the bridge because repairs can be more expensive than any fool might realize.
 

TFZL1

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Mar 24, 2015
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Reminded me of many years ago when I worked in Boston.
One morning there was a cop car on the domed roof of one of the buildings in Cambridge. The cop car was complete with a manikin cop and a box of Dunkin Donuts.
 

Zoot Allures

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Jan 23, 2017
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Reminded me of many years ago when I worked in Boston.
One morning there was a cop car on the domed roof of one of the buildings in Cambridge. The cop car was complete with a manikin cop and a box of Dunkin Donuts.

You are referring to this one

Hacks at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are practical jokes and pranks meant to prominently demonstrate technical aptitude and cleverness, or to commemorate popular culture and historical topics.

Hacks are encouraged with rules IE safety etc


Students put a pretend police car on top of dome to protest parking tickets

 

essguy_

Active member
Nov 1, 2001
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love a great prank (hacks ) but not this one as it is unsafe

Hacks at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are practical jokes and pranks meant to prominently demonstrate technical aptitude and cleverness, or to commemorate popular culture and historical topics.


Students put a pretend police car on top of dome to protest parking tickets


There was the prank at UofT when a group of engineering students disassembled a Mini and re-assembled it in the Dean or Arts and Science's office.
 

Big Rig

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May 6, 2009
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MIT students drove across the country then stole Caltech mascot cannon . They said it was going to be cleaned and security helped them load it













 
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